// Licensed to the .NET Foundation under one or more agreements.
// The .NET Foundation licenses this file to you under the MIT license.
// See the LICENSE file in the project root for more information.

using System.Diagnostics;

namespace Quartz.Collections;

internal static partial class HashHelpers
{
    // must never be written to
    internal static readonly int[] SizeOneIntArray = new int[1];

    public const int HashCollisionThreshold = 100;

    // This is the maximum prime smaller than Array.MaxArrayLength
    public const int MaxPrimeArrayLength = 0x7FEFFFFD;

    public const int HashPrime = 101;

    // Table of prime numbers to use as hash table sizes.
    // A typical resize algorithm would pick the smallest prime number in this array
    // that is larger than twice the previous capacity.
    // Suppose our Hashtable currently has capacity x and enough elements are added
    // such that a resize needs to occur. Resizing first computes 2x then finds the
    // first prime in the table greater than 2x, i.e. if primes are ordered
    // p_1, p_2, ..., p_i, ..., it finds p_n such that p_n-1 < 2x < p_n.
    // Doubling is important for preserving the asymptotic complexity of the
    // hashtable operations such as add.  Having a prime guarantees that double
    // hashing does not lead to infinite loops.  IE, your hash function will be
    // h1(key) + i*h2(key), 0 <= i < size.  h2 and the size must be relatively prime.
    // We prefer the low computation costs of higher prime numbers over the increased
    // memory allocation of a fixed prime number i.e. when right sizing a HashSet.
    public static readonly int[] primes = {
        3, 7, 11, 17, 23, 29, 37, 47, 59, 71, 89, 107, 131, 163, 197, 239, 293, 353, 431, 521, 631, 761, 919,
        1103, 1327, 1597, 1931, 2333, 2801, 3371, 4049, 4861, 5839, 7013, 8419, 10103, 12143, 14591,
        17519, 21023, 25229, 30293, 36353, 43627, 52361, 62851, 75431, 90523, 108631, 130363, 156437,
        187751, 225307, 270371, 324449, 389357, 467237, 560689, 672827, 807403, 968897, 1162687, 1395263,
        1674319, 2009191, 2411033, 2893249, 3471899, 4166287, 4999559, 5999471, 7199369 };

    public static bool IsPrime(int candidate)
    {
        if ((candidate & 1) != 0)
        {
            int limit = (int) Math.Sqrt(candidate);
            for (int divisor = 3; divisor <= limit; divisor += 2)
            {
                if ((candidate % divisor) == 0)
                    return false;
            }
            return true;
        }
        return (candidate == 2);
    }

    public static int GetPrime(int min)
    {
        if (min < 0)
            ThrowHelper.ThrowArgumentException("Hashtable's capacity overflowed and went negative. Check load factor, capacity and the current size of the table.");

        for (int i = 0; i < primes.Length; i++)
        {
            int prime = primes[i];
            if (prime >= min)
                return prime;
        }

        //outside of our predefined table.
        //compute the hard way.
        for (int i = (min | 1); i < int.MaxValue; i += 2)
        {
            if (IsPrime(i) && ((i - 1) % HashPrime != 0))
                return i;
        }
        return min;
    }

    // Returns size of hashtable to grow to.
    public static int ExpandPrime(int oldSize)
    {
        int newSize = 2 * oldSize;

        // Allow the hashtables to grow to maximum possible size (~2G elements) before encountering capacity overflow.
        // Note that this check works even when _items.Length overflowed thanks to the (uint) cast
        if ((uint) newSize > MaxPrimeArrayLength && MaxPrimeArrayLength > oldSize)
        {
            Debug.Assert(MaxPrimeArrayLength == GetPrime(MaxPrimeArrayLength), "Invalid MaxPrimeArrayLength");
            return MaxPrimeArrayLength;
        }

        return GetPrime(newSize);
    }
}